Transculturation Columbian Exchange

Transculturation is a complex and multifaceted concept that has gained significant attention in cultural studies. It refers to the process of cultural exchange and transformation that occurs when different cultures interact and influence one another.

Transculturation Columbian Exchange 1

Transculturation is a term coined by Cuban anthropologist Fernando Ortiz in 1940 [1] to describe the phenomenon of merging and converging cultures.

Transculturation encompasses multiculturalism, interracial marriage, ethnic conflict and war, racism, culturalism, and other contexts that involve more than one culture.

The meaning of TRANSCULTURATION is a process of cultural transformation marked by the influx of new culture elements and the loss or alteration of existing ones.

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Transculturation refers to the ways that subjugated groups creatively adopt and transform cultural forms from dominant groups. It is distinguishable from related concepts such as acculturation, deculturation, and cross-culturation.

Transculturation is a term whose function is to highlight the way cultures are transformed through their interaction with each other.

Transculturation happens when two distinct cultures come into contact and one of them attempts to impose its own norms either directly or indirectly. Thus, A (the original culture) and B (external culture) are connected.

Transculturation: a process of cultural transformation marked by the influx of new culture elements and the loss or alteration of existing ones. Transculturation is what Mieke Bal calls a traveling concept.

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Terms like "transculturation," "accul- turation," "neo-culturation" have been used by anthropologists and literary theorists alike to describe the impact of one culture on another.

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Transculturación (transculturation) is a term coined by the Cuban anthropologist Fernando Ortiz in his canonical essay Contrapunteo cubano del tabaco y el azúcar (1940).